I wanted to do an entry on pajamas because I really like them and a nice, fuzzy, flannel topic like that might be just the thing right now, but I already did an entry on those, too. So what's an Apple Lady to investigate?

We recently celebrated Presidents' Day and I've already done an entry about George Washington, but I haven't done an entry about Abraham Lincoln. Since I am willing to bet $5,000 that Lincolnwins Best Picture (even though I haven't seen any of the nominees), I think an entry about Abraham Lincoln is in order.

In 1849, he patented a system to combine buoyancy chambers in steamboats. He is so far the only President to hold a patent.

He had pet dogs, cats, horses, and a pet turkey.

The horse he had when he died was named Old Bob and was part of his funeral procession.

His love of horses persisted in spite of having been kicked in the head and knocked unconscious by one at the age of 10. He had been shouting at the horse, "Git up, you old hussy," when he got kicked. Except he only got as far as "Git up" when the horse kicked him. According to biographer Carl Sandburg, when he came to, he finished his sentence and the first words out of his mouth were ". . . you old hussy."

He and his wife, Mary Todd, had four children, three of whom died. The only child who lived longer than age 18 was Robert Todd.

He was pretty good at wrestling. He lost only one match out of 300.

He never actually slept in the Lincoln Bedroom. While he was president, he used that room as his personal office and meeting-room.

The Lincoln Bedroom, where Lincoln never slept, in 2007.(Photo from the White House Museum)

Political

He served one term in the US House of Representatives as a member of the Whig party -- the only Whig representing Illinois -- and he spoke out against the Mexican-American War.

After he left the House, he served as a company attorney and lobbyist for the Illinois Central Railroad.

He ran for US Senate twice and was defeated both times.

It was the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed states to choose whether they would be slave states or free states, that brought about the formation of the Republican Party. It grew out of the Whig party and coalesced around people who agreed that slavery should not be allowed to expand westward. Lincoln, a moderate opposed to slavery, left the Whigs and joined the Republicans.

He was elected President in 1860, and Civil War broke out less than a year later. (OK, I knew this one too, but it's still stunning. Can you imagine, being President for a few months, and then the country splits and starts a war with itself? I would probably soil my undergarments.)

He distributed $2,000,000 from the Treasury for war materiel without an
appropriation from Congress; he called for 75,000 volunteers into
military service without a declaration of war; and he suspended the writ
of habeas corpus, arresting and imprisoning suspected Confederate
sympathizers without a warrant. . . . From all directions, Lincoln faced disparagement and defiance. He was
often at odds with his generals, his Cabinet, his party, and a majority
of the American people.

Lincoln and General McClellan at Antietam. His coat is looking a bit snug. Looks like he's got a bunch of official documents in his inside pocket.(Photo from Kiko's House)

Meanwhile, as the Civil War was going on, he accomplished a few other things, too.

In 1862, he established the US Dept of Agriculture, made it possible for land-grant colleges in states across the US to be formed, he signed the Homestead Act, and the Pacific Railroad Act.

In 1863, he signed the National Banking Act, which created a national banking system and established our first paper currency.

He also declared Thanksgiving a national holiday.

There was also that little thing called the Emancipation Proclamation that he issued in January 1863. It actually didn't have much legal oomph, but it set the stage for the 13th Amendment.

The 13th Amendment states simply: "Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for
crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist
within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation."(Image from the Library of Congress; see a larger version here)

Contrary to popular belief, Lincoln did not write the Gettysburg Address on a scrap of paper while riding the train on the way there. He began crafting it weeks before on White House stationery. The bunk about the scrap of paper appeared in highly fictionalized article in Scribner's, which was later expanded into a book. A bunky book, you might say.

The day he was shot, April 14, 1865, was Good Friday.

An artist's rendition of the shooting. After he was shot, he was taken to a house nearby. The bed was too short for his tall frame, so he was laid on it diagonally and the footboard was removed. (Photo from Abraham Lincoln Classroom. Details of his treatment post-shooting from Gizmodo)

The very day he was assassinated, he signed into law a bill that created the Secret Service. But since the Secret Service's original purpose was to combat widespread counterfeiting and not to protect the President, it wouldn't have done him any good.

It was, in fact, counterfeiters who tried to steal his corpse from his tomb in 1876. They planned to hold his corpse for ransom in exchange for the release of a top counterfeiter from prison. The Secret Service foiled their plot, however. After that, his body was moved to an unmarked grave and later encased in a steel cage and buried under 10 feet of concrete.

I've read that the movie deals almost entirely with efforts to pass and ratify the 13th Amendment. So here's one last little fact for you about good old #13:

The last state to ratify was Mississippi in 1995, and technically, it wasn't even done then because they never submitted the proper paperwork to the National Archives. Thanks to the help of an interested lay-historian, the 13th Amendment was finally and officially ratified in Mississippi, the last state of the union to do so, in 2013.

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